IAG Close to
Ordering Airbus's New A350 Jet
International Consolidated
Airlines Group SA IAG.MC -0.75%could as soon as this week place an order for the
new Airbus A350 long-range jetliner for its British Airways unit, according to
two people familiar with the talks.
If completed, the deal
would be a significant win for the Airbus unit of European Aeronautic Defence
& Space Co. EAD.FR -0.75%over rival Boeing Co., BA -1.36%which has been
trying to persuade IAG to buy a proposed update of its 777 model, dubbed the
777X, intended to compete with the A350.
Boeing hasn't started
formally offering the 777X yet-the company needs approval to launch the model
from its board. A decision is expected as early as this month. But the Chicago
company has provided extensive detail about the updated jet to prospective
clients, and has made offers conditional on board approval to sell the plane to
airlines and lessors including IAG, Japan Airlines Co., 9201.TO +1.51%Deutsche
Lufthansa AG, LHA.XE -0.19%Air Lease Corp. AL -1.21%and Emirates Airline,
according to industry officials. Boeing aims to deliver the first new 777 model
to customers by late 2019 or early 2020.
"We continue to see IAG as an important customer, and look forward to working with IAG to meet its fleet needs," said Karen Crabtree, Boeing spokeswoman. She said Boeing has been "developing options to improve on the 777's popularity" and that customers are "happy with the airplane design."
Even if IAG orders the A350
for British Airways, Boeing is "not out of the running" for a later order for
the 777Xs, said one of the people familiar with the carrier's plans. But another
person said that if IAG orders A350s, it wouldn't receive preferential terms on
Boeing orders.
Early buyers of a new
jetliner model, known as launch customers, generally receive preferential terms
and big discounts, potentially exceeding 50% off catalog prices.
Boeing's product
development unit was scheduled to meet on Monday with top executives and the
company's senior advisory group, which is made up of retired top engineers that
designed the company's earlier jetliners. The meeting is an important step in
the process of preparing the jet's business model ahead of seeking the board's
approval, said two people familiar with the meeting.
British Airways currently
has 52 of the existing versions of the long-range 777 that is among Boeing's
best-selling planes. The carrier currently flies no Airbus long-range,
twin-aisle jetliners but is due soon to receive its first Airbus A380
superjumbo, which it ordered alongside Boeing's 787 Dreamliner in
2007.
The exact number of planes
in IAG's A350 order, and its value, are still under negotiation, according to
the people familiar with the talks. IAG's talks with Airbus focus on the
A350-1000 model, the largest of three A350 versions Airbus is developing and is
due in 2017, the people said. The order could also include a smaller,
longer-range version, the A350-900, one of these people said.
The purchase of the largest
A350 model is likely designed to replace the company's aging fleet of 747-400
aircraft, which were delivered from 1989 to 1999.
An IAG spokeswoman declined
to comment on possible orders.
Japan Airlines, which has
long operated an all-Boeing fleet, also is weighing a possible order for the
A350, one person familiar with the situation said.
"When we look to introduce
new planes we weigh all of the options available to us whether it's from Airbus
or Boeing. But JAL presently has no specific plans to purchase the Airbus A350,"
said a JAL spokesman.
IAG was created in 2011 by
the merger of British Airways with Spain's Iberia. Iberia's fleet is all Airbus
planes. British Airways' short and medium-haul European fleet is all Airbus
models and its twin-aisle long-range jets have been Boeing jets for nearly a
decade.
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